Pubdate: Wed, 02 Apr 2014 Source: Journal News, The (NY) Copyright: 2014 The Gannett Company, Inc. Contact: http://www.lohud.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1205 Author: Jack Mack Note: The writer is a resident of Croton-on-Hudson. OVERDOSE ANTIDOTE LEGISLATION COULD SAVE YOUNG LIVES My son Casey died of an opioid overdose in Westchester County on Labor Day 2012 when he was 24. No one gave him the antidote to the drug he had ingested. That antidote is naloxone, brand name Narcan. Casey's death is part of an epidemic in this country that we are not acknowledging. Not only our minds, but also our laws and public policies have not caught up with what is a staggering new reality. Guess what kills more people: traffic accidents or accidental drug overdoses? The latter, though you wouldn't know it from our focus on speeding, well-engineered roads, reducing drunk driving and all the money we spend on traffic safety. Guess again; which epidemic has more deaths per year: HIV/AIDS or overdose? Again, the latter, with opioid overdose deaths alone more than double HIV/AIDS deaths in the U.S. As a grieving parent, I ask for public acknowledgment of this epidemic by starting to change laws. I'm not tired of sympathy or finished with grieving, but I want action, action by you. A bill is pending in the New York state Legislature that would dramatically increase the accessibility of naloxone. Please contact your legislators and ask for their support. This is not a partisan issue. The bill was introduced by Republican state Sen. Kemp Hannon from Nassau County and by Democratic Assemblyman Jeffrey Dinowitz from the Bronx. It passed the New York state Senate unanimously and is now pending in the Assembly. The vote is imminent in the Legislature, so it's time to contact your representatives. Picture this now, put yourself in my shoes. My son or yours is not breathing with signs of drug use nearby. You don't know how long he's been out, but you know that the antidote is effective one to three hours into the overdose. Won't you wish you had some handy? Won't you wish all first responders carried it on all calls? You don't have to love people addicted to drugs to be in favor of this bill, but even people addicted to drugs deserve another chance. As a society, we rightly go to great lengths to save peoples' lives. Look at first responders who risk their lives to keep us and our loved ones alive. They don't let their own prejudices interfere with their lifesaving work. Please revive future victims of this epidemic by contacting your state representatives about this bill. The writer is a resident of Croton-on-Hudson. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D